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Improving Communication About Serious Illness (ICSI)

Primary Purpose

Critical Illness, Chronic Disease, Terminal Care

Status
Completed
Phase
Not Applicable
Locations
United States
Study Type
Interventional
Intervention
Communication Feedback Form for Patients with Serious Illness
Sponsored by
University of Washington
About
Eligibility
Locations
Arms
Outcomes
Full info

About this trial

This is an interventional supportive care trial for Critical Illness focused on measuring Palliative Care, End-of-Life Issues, Patient/Clinician Communication, Patient/Family Communication, Concordance, Treatment Preferences, Anxiety, Depressive Symptoms, Talking with Your Doctor, Coping with Serious Illness, Outpatient Collaboration

Eligibility Criteria

18 Years - undefined (Adult, Older Adult)All SexesDoes not accept healthy volunteers

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Eligible primary clinicians will include all clinicians who provide ongoing primary or specialty care to eligible patient populations. This will include primary care physicians (family medicine and internal medicine), oncologists, pulmonologists, cardiologists, gastroenterologists, nephrologists, neurologists, hepatologists, and geriatricians. Primary clinicians may also include nurse practitioners and physician assistants playing a "primary role" with eligible patients. A "primary role" denotes any clinician for whom having a discussion about end-of-life care with eligible patients would be indicated
  • Eligible interprofessional team members will include nurses, social workers and other clinicians who are part of an enrolled primary clinician's clinic team.
  • Eligible patients will be those under the care of a participating clinician who are 18 years of age or older, have had 2 or more visits with the primary clinician in the last 18 months, and meet diagnostic criteria. Diagnostic criteria include: 1) metastatic cancer or inoperable lung cancer; 2) chronic obstructive pulmonary disease with FEV1 values <35% predicted or oxygen dependence or restrictive lung disease with a TLC < 50% predicted; 3) New York Heart Association Class III or IV heart failure; 4) Child's Class C cirrhosis or MELD score of >17; 5) dialysis-dependent renal failure and either diabetes or a serum albumin of < 2.5; or, 6) older than 75 years with at least one life-limiting chronic illness or older than 90 years. Additional criteria include: PAH w. 6MWD <250m, restrictive lung disease (IPF, ILD) w/ TLC <50%, and cystic fibrosis with FEV1 < 30%. Eligible patients will also be English-speaking and have no significant dementia or cognitive impairment that would limit his/her ability to complete questionnaires.
  • Eligible family members will be identified by the patient, with the criterion that the patient would want the family member involved in medical decision-making for the patient if he/she was not able. For the purpose of this study, "family member" is not confined to legal next-of-kin or immediate family member. Any family member, friend, or caregiver is eligible who is English-speaking and has no dementia or delirium limiting his/her ability to complete questionnaires.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Reasons for exclusion for all subject groups include: legal or risk management concerns; and physical or mental limitations preventing ability to complete research activities.

Sites / Locations

  • Valley Medical Center
  • Harborview Medical Center
  • Swedish Medical Center
  • Northwest Hospital and Medical Center
  • University of Washington Medical Center
  • UW Neighborhood Clinics

Arms of the Study

Arm 1

Arm 2

Arm Type

Experimental

No Intervention

Arm Label

Feedback Group

Comparison/Usual Care Group

Arm Description

Subjects will complete surveys and assessments and will be given the Communication Feedback Form for Patients with Serious Illness to use prior to and during a target outpatient visit.

Subjects will only complete surveys and assessments.

Outcomes

Primary Outcome Measures

Occurrence of Discussion About Goals of Care at Target Visit
Patient's response to question, "Did you discuss with this doctor the kind of medical care you would want if you were too sick to speak for yourself?"

Secondary Outcome Measures

Occurrence of Discussion About Goals of Care at Target Visit
Electronic Health Record (EHR) documentation of discussion about advance care planning, prognosis, treatment preference, hospice, palliative care, or Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST) at target visit
Occurrence of Discussion About Goals of Care at Target Visit Among Patients Who Did Not Object to Future Discussion at Baseline
Patient's response to question, "Did you discuss with this doctor the kind of medical care you would want if you were too sick to speak for yourself?"
Occurrence of Discussion About Goals of Care at Target Visit Among Patients Who Did Not Object to Future Discussion at Baseline
Electronic Health Record (EHR) documentation of discussion about advance care planning, prognosis, treatment preference, hospice, palliative care, or Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST) at target visit
Goal-Concordant Care
Binary variable indicating whether patient's reported focus of current treatment was concordant with treatment preference
Goal-Concordant Care Among Patients With Stable Treatment Preference
Binary variable indicating whether patient's reported focus of current treatment was concordant with treatment preference
Quality of Communication (QOC): Four-Indicator Latent Construct
Quality of Communication: patient ratings of clinician on seven aspects of end-of-life communication, each aspect having a pseudo-continuous response range of 0 ('clinician didn't do this') to 11 ('the very best I could imagine'). Measured with QOC items 1, 2, 5, & 6 (measurement invariance imposed between groups and over time). Outcome is a latent variable, which is not observable, nor is it a composite score that can be mathematically computed (e.g., as a sum or average) from its measured indicators. Instead, it is an abstract construct that is inferred through a mathematical model; it represents a concept and is, therefore, a hypothetical variable. Theoretical range: unknown; the latent variable is a hypothetical - not an actual - variable Actual range: inapplicable; cannot be determined; this is an indirectly-measured latent variable; Higher value indicates better outcome (i.e., higher quality communication) Unit of measurement: scores on a scale
Quality of Communication (QOC): Individual QOC Items
Quality of Communication: patient ratings of clinician on seven aspects of end-of-life communication, each aspect having a pseudo-continuous response range of 0 ('clinician didn't do this') to 11 ('the very best I could imagine'). Individual QOC Items. Theoretical range: 0-11 Actual range: 0-11 Higher value indicates better outcome (i.e., higher quality communication) Unit of measurement: units on a scale
Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-8): Two-Indicator Latent Construct
Patient Health Questionnaire: A self-report measure of depressive symptoms. Eight symptoms, each with ordinal response options, each option associated with a text description ranging from 'Not at all' to 'Nearly every day'. Two-Indicator Latent Construct: Measured with PHQ items 1 & 2 (measurement invariance imposed between groups and over time). Outcome is a latent variable, which is not observable, nor is it a composite score that can be mathematically computed (e.g., as a sum or average) from its measured indicators. Instead, it is an abstract construct that is inferred through a mathematical model; it represents a concept and is, therefore, a hypothetical variable. Theoretical range: unknown; the latent variable is a hypothetical - not an actual - variable Actual range: inapplicable; cannot be determined; this is an indirectly-measured latent variable Higher value indicates worse outcome (i.e., higher level of depressive symptoms) Unit of measurement: scores on a scale
Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-8): Eight-Item Scale
Patient Health Questionnaire: A self-report measure of depressive symptoms. Eight symptoms, each with ordinal response options, each option associated with a text description ranging from 'Not at all' to 'Nearly every day'. Eight-Item Scale: Sum of responses for the eight symptoms (weighted by 8/7 if only 7 items answered). Theoretical range: 0-24 Actual range: 0-24 Higher value indicates worse outcome (i.e., higher level of depressive symptoms) Unit of measurement: scores on a scale
Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-8): Two-Indicator Latent Construct
Patient Health Questionnaire: A self-report measure of depressive symptoms. Eight symptoms, each with ordinal response options, each option associated with a text description ranging from 'Not at all' to 'Nearly every day'. Two-Indicator Latent Construct: Measured with PHQ items 1 & 2 (measurement invariance imposed between groups and over time). Outcome is a latent variable, which is not observable, nor is it a composite score that can be mathematically computed (e.g., as a sum or average) from its measured indicators. Instead, it is an abstract construct that is inferred through a mathematical model; it represents a concept and is, therefore, a hypothetical variable. Theoretical range: unknown; the latent variable is a hypothetical - not an actual - variable Actual range: inapplicable; cannot be determined; this is an indirectly-measured latent variable Higher value indicates worse outcome (i.e., higher level of depressive symptoms) Unit of measurement: scores on a scale
Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-8): Eight-Item Scale
Patient Health Questionnaire: A self-report measure of depressive symptoms. Eight symptoms, each with ordinal response options, each option associated with a text description ranging from 'Not at all' to 'Nearly every day'. Eight-Item Scale: Sum of responses for the eight symptoms (weighted by 8/7 if only 7 items answered). Theoretical range: 0-24 Actual range: 0-24 Higher value indicates worse outcome (i.e., higher level of depressive symptoms) Unit of measurement: scores on a scale
Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7): Two-Indicator Latent Construct
Generalized Anxiety Disorder: A self-report measure of anxiety symptoms. Seven symptoms, each with ordinal response options, each option associated with a text description ranging from 'Not at all' to 'Nearly every day'. Two-Indicator Latent Construct: Measured with GAD items 1 & 2 (measurement invariance imposed between groups and over time). Outcome is a latent variable, which is not observable, nor is it a composite score that can be mathematically computed (e.g., as a sum or average) from its measured indicators. Instead, it is an abstract construct that is inferred through a mathematical model; it represents a concept and is, therefore, a hypothetical variable. Theoretical range: unknown; the latent variable is a hypothetical - not an actual - variable Actual range: inapplicable; cannot be determined; this is an indirectly-measured latent variable Higher value indicates worse outcome (i.e., higher level of anxiety symptoms) Unit of measurement: scores on a scale
Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7): Seven-Item Scale
Generalized Anxiety Disorder: A self-report measure of anxiety symptoms. Seven symptoms, each with ordinal response options, each option associated with a text description ranging from 'Not at all' to 'Nearly every day'. Seven-Item Scale: Sum of responses for the seven symptoms (weighted by 7/6 if only 6 items answered). (Strong floor effect.) Theoretical range: 0-21 Actual range: 0-21 Higher value indicates worse outcome (i.e., higher level of anxiety symptoms) Unit of measurement: scores on a scale
Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7): Two-Indicator Latent Construct
Generalized Anxiety Disorder: A self-report measure of anxiety symptoms. Seven symptoms, each with ordinal response options, each option associated with a text description ranging from 'Not at all' to 'Nearly every day'. Two-Indicator Latent Construct: Measured with GAD items 1 & 2 (measurement invariance imposed between groups and over time). Outcome is a latent variable, which is not observable, nor is it a composite score that can be mathematically computed (e.g., as a sum or average) from its measured indicators. Instead, it is an abstract construct that is inferred through a mathematical model; it represents a concept and is, therefore, a hypothetical variable. Theoretical range: unknown; the latent variable is a hypothetical - not an actual - variable Actual range: inapplicable; cannot be determined; this is an indirectly-measured latent variable Higher value indicates worse outcome (i.e., higher level of anxiety symptoms) Unit of measurement: scores on a scale
Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7): Seven-Item Scale
Generalized Anxiety Disorder: A self-report measure of anxiety symptoms. Seven symptoms, each with ordinal response options, each option associated with a text description ranging from 'Not at all' to 'Nearly every day'. Seven-Item Scale: Sum of responses for the seven symptoms (weighted by 7/6 if only 6 items answered). (Strong floor effect.) Theoretical range: 0-21 Actual range: 0-21 Higher value indicates worse outcome (i.e., higher level of anxiety symptoms) Unit of measurement: scores on a scale
Avoidance of Life-Sustaining Therapies, All Patients
Review of EHR documentation to assess use of three indicators of life-sustaining therapies (LST): admission to an ICU, receipt of CPR, and receipt of mechanical ventilation
Avoidance of Life-Sustaining Therapies, Patients With Comfort Care Preference
Review of EHR documentation to assess use of three indicators of life-sustaining therapies (LST): admission to an ICU, receipt of CPR, and receipt of mechanical ventilation for patients preferring "comfort" (quality of life over extending life) at the end-of-life
Palliative Care Consultation, Inpatient Stay - All Patients
EHR documentation of palliative care consultation during an inpatient stay for all patients with target visit and chart abstraction.
Palliative Care Consultation, Inpatient Stay - Patients Most Likely to Benefit
EHR documentation of palliative care consultation during an inpatient stay for patients who reported preference for "comfort care" (quality of life over extending life) and wanted a discussion.
Palliative Care Consultation, Inpatient Stay - All Patients
EHR documentation of palliative care consultation during an inpatient stay for all patients with target visit and chart abstraction.
Palliative Care Consultation, Inpatient Stay - Patients Most Likely to Benefit
EHR documentation of palliative care consultation during an inpatient stay for patients who reported preference for "comfort care" (quality of life over extending life) and wanted a discussion.
Palliative Care Referral, Outpatient Visit - All Patients
EHR documentation of referral to palliative care services, or discussion about a referral, during an outpatient visit.
Palliative Care Referral, Outpatient Visit - Patients Most Likely to Benefit
EHR documentation of referral to palliative care services, or discussion about a referral, during an outpatient visit for patients who reported preference for "comfort care" (quality of life over extending life) and wanted a discussion.
Palliative Care Referral, Outpatient Visit - All Patients
EHR documentation of referral to palliative care services, or discussion about a referral, during an outpatient visit.
Palliative Care Referral, Outpatient Visit - Patients Most Likely to Benefit
EHR documentation of referral to palliative care services, or discussion about a referral, during an outpatient visit for patients who reported preference for "comfort care" (quality of life over extending life) and wanted a discussion.
Palliative Care Consultation and/or Referral - All Patients
EHR documentation of palliative care referral during an outpatient visit and/or palliative care consultation during an inpatient stay.
Palliative Care Consultation and/or Referral - Patients Most Likely to Benefit
EHR documentation of palliative care referral during an outpatient visit and/or palliative care consultation during an inpatient stay for patients who reported preference for "comfort care" (quality of life over extending life) and wanted a discussion.
Palliative Care Consultation and/or Referral - All Patients
EHR documentation of palliative care referral during an outpatient visit and/or palliative care consultation during an inpatient stay.
Palliative Care Consultation and/or Referral - Patients Most Likely to Benefit
EHR documentation of palliative care referral during an outpatient visit and/or palliative care consultation during an inpatient stay for patients who reported preference for "comfort care" (quality of life over extending life) and wanted a discussion.

Full Information

First Posted
August 28, 2013
Last Updated
March 7, 2019
Sponsor
University of Washington
Collaborators
Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute
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1. Study Identification

Unique Protocol Identification Number
NCT01933789
Brief Title
Improving Communication About Serious Illness
Acronym
ICSI
Official Title
Health System Intervention to Improve Communication About End-of-Life Care for Vulnerable Patients
Study Type
Interventional

2. Study Status

Record Verification Date
March 2019
Overall Recruitment Status
Completed
Study Start Date
September 2013 (undefined)
Primary Completion Date
December 2016 (Actual)
Study Completion Date
December 2016 (Actual)

3. Sponsor/Collaborators

Responsible Party, by Official Title
Principal Investigator
Name of the Sponsor
University of Washington
Collaborators
Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute

4. Oversight

Data Monitoring Committee
Yes

5. Study Description

Brief Summary
The purpose of this study is to improve care delivered to patients with serious illness by enhancing communication among patients, families, and clinicians in the outpatient setting. We are testing a new way to help patients share their preferences for talking about end-of-life care with their clinicians and families. To do this we created a simple, short feedback form. The form is designed to help clinicians understand what patients would like to talk about. The goal of this research study is to show that using a feedback form is possible and can be helpful for patients and their families.
Detailed Description
Four decades of research on end-of-life care indicate that people who are dying often spend their final days with a significant burden of pain and other symptoms and receive care they would not choose. Patient-clinician communication about end-of-life care is an important focus for improving care for three reasons: 1) when it occurs, it is associated with improved quality of life, reduced anxiety, and fewer intensive life-sustaining therapies at the end of life; 2) physicians frequently do not have discussions about end-of-life care with their patients even though most patients desire these discussions; and 3) our preliminary studies suggest that a simple intervention based on each patient's informational needs and preferences can increase the occurrence and quality of patient-clinician communication about end-of-life care. By tailoring patient-clinician discussions to the individual patient, patients will be able to make care decisions that are best for them and clinicians will be able to provide patients with the care patients' desire. Our long-term goal is to ensure that patients receive the end-of-life care they desire through improved patient-clinician communication. If effective, this health-system intervention will improve: 1) the occurrence and quality of patient-centered communication about end-of-life care for patients with chronic life-limiting illness and their families; 2) the agreement between patients' wishes for care and care received; and 3) the burden of symptoms of anxiety and depression experienced by patients and families. We propose a randomized trial of a feedback form, called a "Jumpstart" form, provided to patients, family members and clinicians, specifying the individual patient's communication needs and preferences concerning end-of- life care. The trial will be tested with clinicians (n=120) who provide primary or specialty care to eligible patients at clinics of two large healthcare systems. Eligible patients (up to 6 per clinician, goal n=500) will include those with chronic, life-limiting illness. Family members of patients and interdisciplinary team members of primary clinicians may participate. Primary clinicians will be randomized to the intervention or usual care. The intervention's effectiveness will be compared with usual care using validated self-report questionnaires that will be collected longitudinally (baseline/enrollment, within 2 weeks of the target visit, 3 months, 6 months) from patients and families. Analyses include statistical approaches that take into account that there will be more than one patient for each physician and that data are collected at multiple time points. Outcomes of this study include patient assessments of: 1) frequency and quality of patient/clinician communication; 2) agreement between care patients desire and care patients receive; and 3) symptoms of anxiety and depression. We will also use qualitative data to accomplish the following goals: 1) to explore subjects' experiences with the study's activities; 2) to understand barriers to participation; and 3) to explore patient and family experiences with the intervention. To obtain these goals, we will contact a total of 30-40 participants, selected from all subject groups, to participate in one-on-one semi-structured interviews during which they will be asked to share their experiences as a study participant and their perspectives on study activities.

6. Conditions and Keywords

Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
Critical Illness, Chronic Disease, Terminal Care, Palliative Care, Communication, Advance Care Planning, Neoplasm Metastasis, Lung Neoplasms, Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive, Heart Failure, End Stage Liver Disease, Kidney Failure, Chronic
Keywords
Palliative Care, End-of-Life Issues, Patient/Clinician Communication, Patient/Family Communication, Concordance, Treatment Preferences, Anxiety, Depressive Symptoms, Talking with Your Doctor, Coping with Serious Illness, Outpatient Collaboration

7. Study Design

Primary Purpose
Supportive Care
Study Phase
Not Applicable
Interventional Study Model
Parallel Assignment
Masking
None (Open Label)
Allocation
Randomized
Enrollment
817 (Actual)

8. Arms, Groups, and Interventions

Arm Title
Feedback Group
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
Subjects will complete surveys and assessments and will be given the Communication Feedback Form for Patients with Serious Illness to use prior to and during a target outpatient visit.
Arm Title
Comparison/Usual Care Group
Arm Type
No Intervention
Arm Description
Subjects will only complete surveys and assessments.
Intervention Type
Behavioral
Intervention Name(s)
Communication Feedback Form for Patients with Serious Illness
Other Intervention Name(s)
"Audit and Feedback"
Intervention Description
The intervention, based on self-efficacy theory, identifies patients' preferences for communication about end-of-life care (EOLC) and barriers and facilitators to this communication, and collates these data into a feedback form. The feedback forms are tailored to each recipient (clinician, patient, family) to support the communication tasks which that recipient will address. Feedback forms are sent to participants prior to the target clinic visit. The primary clinician's form suggests referral to palliative care if there are "potentially unmet palliative-care communication needs." All forms include "tips" to help the recipient respond to communication preferences appropriately.
Primary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Occurrence of Discussion About Goals of Care at Target Visit
Description
Patient's response to question, "Did you discuss with this doctor the kind of medical care you would want if you were too sick to speak for yourself?"
Time Frame
2 weeks after target visit
Secondary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Occurrence of Discussion About Goals of Care at Target Visit
Description
Electronic Health Record (EHR) documentation of discussion about advance care planning, prognosis, treatment preference, hospice, palliative care, or Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST) at target visit
Time Frame
Target visit
Title
Occurrence of Discussion About Goals of Care at Target Visit Among Patients Who Did Not Object to Future Discussion at Baseline
Description
Patient's response to question, "Did you discuss with this doctor the kind of medical care you would want if you were too sick to speak for yourself?"
Time Frame
2 weeks after target visit
Title
Occurrence of Discussion About Goals of Care at Target Visit Among Patients Who Did Not Object to Future Discussion at Baseline
Description
Electronic Health Record (EHR) documentation of discussion about advance care planning, prognosis, treatment preference, hospice, palliative care, or Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST) at target visit
Time Frame
Target visit
Title
Goal-Concordant Care
Description
Binary variable indicating whether patient's reported focus of current treatment was concordant with treatment preference
Time Frame
3 months after target visit
Title
Goal-Concordant Care Among Patients With Stable Treatment Preference
Description
Binary variable indicating whether patient's reported focus of current treatment was concordant with treatment preference
Time Frame
3 months after target visit
Title
Quality of Communication (QOC): Four-Indicator Latent Construct
Description
Quality of Communication: patient ratings of clinician on seven aspects of end-of-life communication, each aspect having a pseudo-continuous response range of 0 ('clinician didn't do this') to 11 ('the very best I could imagine'). Measured with QOC items 1, 2, 5, & 6 (measurement invariance imposed between groups and over time). Outcome is a latent variable, which is not observable, nor is it a composite score that can be mathematically computed (e.g., as a sum or average) from its measured indicators. Instead, it is an abstract construct that is inferred through a mathematical model; it represents a concept and is, therefore, a hypothetical variable. Theoretical range: unknown; the latent variable is a hypothetical - not an actual - variable Actual range: inapplicable; cannot be determined; this is an indirectly-measured latent variable; Higher value indicates better outcome (i.e., higher quality communication) Unit of measurement: scores on a scale
Time Frame
2 weeks from target visit
Title
Quality of Communication (QOC): Individual QOC Items
Description
Quality of Communication: patient ratings of clinician on seven aspects of end-of-life communication, each aspect having a pseudo-continuous response range of 0 ('clinician didn't do this') to 11 ('the very best I could imagine'). Individual QOC Items. Theoretical range: 0-11 Actual range: 0-11 Higher value indicates better outcome (i.e., higher quality communication) Unit of measurement: units on a scale
Time Frame
2 weeks from target visit
Title
Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-8): Two-Indicator Latent Construct
Description
Patient Health Questionnaire: A self-report measure of depressive symptoms. Eight symptoms, each with ordinal response options, each option associated with a text description ranging from 'Not at all' to 'Nearly every day'. Two-Indicator Latent Construct: Measured with PHQ items 1 & 2 (measurement invariance imposed between groups and over time). Outcome is a latent variable, which is not observable, nor is it a composite score that can be mathematically computed (e.g., as a sum or average) from its measured indicators. Instead, it is an abstract construct that is inferred through a mathematical model; it represents a concept and is, therefore, a hypothetical variable. Theoretical range: unknown; the latent variable is a hypothetical - not an actual - variable Actual range: inapplicable; cannot be determined; this is an indirectly-measured latent variable Higher value indicates worse outcome (i.e., higher level of depressive symptoms) Unit of measurement: scores on a scale
Time Frame
3 months after target visit
Title
Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-8): Eight-Item Scale
Description
Patient Health Questionnaire: A self-report measure of depressive symptoms. Eight symptoms, each with ordinal response options, each option associated with a text description ranging from 'Not at all' to 'Nearly every day'. Eight-Item Scale: Sum of responses for the eight symptoms (weighted by 8/7 if only 7 items answered). Theoretical range: 0-24 Actual range: 0-24 Higher value indicates worse outcome (i.e., higher level of depressive symptoms) Unit of measurement: scores on a scale
Time Frame
3 months after target visit
Title
Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-8): Two-Indicator Latent Construct
Description
Patient Health Questionnaire: A self-report measure of depressive symptoms. Eight symptoms, each with ordinal response options, each option associated with a text description ranging from 'Not at all' to 'Nearly every day'. Two-Indicator Latent Construct: Measured with PHQ items 1 & 2 (measurement invariance imposed between groups and over time). Outcome is a latent variable, which is not observable, nor is it a composite score that can be mathematically computed (e.g., as a sum or average) from its measured indicators. Instead, it is an abstract construct that is inferred through a mathematical model; it represents a concept and is, therefore, a hypothetical variable. Theoretical range: unknown; the latent variable is a hypothetical - not an actual - variable Actual range: inapplicable; cannot be determined; this is an indirectly-measured latent variable Higher value indicates worse outcome (i.e., higher level of depressive symptoms) Unit of measurement: scores on a scale
Time Frame
6 months after target visit
Title
Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-8): Eight-Item Scale
Description
Patient Health Questionnaire: A self-report measure of depressive symptoms. Eight symptoms, each with ordinal response options, each option associated with a text description ranging from 'Not at all' to 'Nearly every day'. Eight-Item Scale: Sum of responses for the eight symptoms (weighted by 8/7 if only 7 items answered). Theoretical range: 0-24 Actual range: 0-24 Higher value indicates worse outcome (i.e., higher level of depressive symptoms) Unit of measurement: scores on a scale
Time Frame
6 months after target visit
Title
Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7): Two-Indicator Latent Construct
Description
Generalized Anxiety Disorder: A self-report measure of anxiety symptoms. Seven symptoms, each with ordinal response options, each option associated with a text description ranging from 'Not at all' to 'Nearly every day'. Two-Indicator Latent Construct: Measured with GAD items 1 & 2 (measurement invariance imposed between groups and over time). Outcome is a latent variable, which is not observable, nor is it a composite score that can be mathematically computed (e.g., as a sum or average) from its measured indicators. Instead, it is an abstract construct that is inferred through a mathematical model; it represents a concept and is, therefore, a hypothetical variable. Theoretical range: unknown; the latent variable is a hypothetical - not an actual - variable Actual range: inapplicable; cannot be determined; this is an indirectly-measured latent variable Higher value indicates worse outcome (i.e., higher level of anxiety symptoms) Unit of measurement: scores on a scale
Time Frame
3 months after target visit
Title
Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7): Seven-Item Scale
Description
Generalized Anxiety Disorder: A self-report measure of anxiety symptoms. Seven symptoms, each with ordinal response options, each option associated with a text description ranging from 'Not at all' to 'Nearly every day'. Seven-Item Scale: Sum of responses for the seven symptoms (weighted by 7/6 if only 6 items answered). (Strong floor effect.) Theoretical range: 0-21 Actual range: 0-21 Higher value indicates worse outcome (i.e., higher level of anxiety symptoms) Unit of measurement: scores on a scale
Time Frame
3 months after target visit
Title
Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7): Two-Indicator Latent Construct
Description
Generalized Anxiety Disorder: A self-report measure of anxiety symptoms. Seven symptoms, each with ordinal response options, each option associated with a text description ranging from 'Not at all' to 'Nearly every day'. Two-Indicator Latent Construct: Measured with GAD items 1 & 2 (measurement invariance imposed between groups and over time). Outcome is a latent variable, which is not observable, nor is it a composite score that can be mathematically computed (e.g., as a sum or average) from its measured indicators. Instead, it is an abstract construct that is inferred through a mathematical model; it represents a concept and is, therefore, a hypothetical variable. Theoretical range: unknown; the latent variable is a hypothetical - not an actual - variable Actual range: inapplicable; cannot be determined; this is an indirectly-measured latent variable Higher value indicates worse outcome (i.e., higher level of anxiety symptoms) Unit of measurement: scores on a scale
Time Frame
6 months after target visit
Title
Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7): Seven-Item Scale
Description
Generalized Anxiety Disorder: A self-report measure of anxiety symptoms. Seven symptoms, each with ordinal response options, each option associated with a text description ranging from 'Not at all' to 'Nearly every day'. Seven-Item Scale: Sum of responses for the seven symptoms (weighted by 7/6 if only 6 items answered). (Strong floor effect.) Theoretical range: 0-21 Actual range: 0-21 Higher value indicates worse outcome (i.e., higher level of anxiety symptoms) Unit of measurement: scores on a scale
Time Frame
6 months after target visit
Title
Avoidance of Life-Sustaining Therapies, All Patients
Description
Review of EHR documentation to assess use of three indicators of life-sustaining therapies (LST): admission to an ICU, receipt of CPR, and receipt of mechanical ventilation
Time Frame
6-month period following the target visit
Title
Avoidance of Life-Sustaining Therapies, Patients With Comfort Care Preference
Description
Review of EHR documentation to assess use of three indicators of life-sustaining therapies (LST): admission to an ICU, receipt of CPR, and receipt of mechanical ventilation for patients preferring "comfort" (quality of life over extending life) at the end-of-life
Time Frame
6-month period following the target visit
Title
Palliative Care Consultation, Inpatient Stay - All Patients
Description
EHR documentation of palliative care consultation during an inpatient stay for all patients with target visit and chart abstraction.
Time Frame
3-month period following the target visit
Title
Palliative Care Consultation, Inpatient Stay - Patients Most Likely to Benefit
Description
EHR documentation of palliative care consultation during an inpatient stay for patients who reported preference for "comfort care" (quality of life over extending life) and wanted a discussion.
Time Frame
3-month period following the target visit
Title
Palliative Care Consultation, Inpatient Stay - All Patients
Description
EHR documentation of palliative care consultation during an inpatient stay for all patients with target visit and chart abstraction.
Time Frame
6-month period following the target visit
Title
Palliative Care Consultation, Inpatient Stay - Patients Most Likely to Benefit
Description
EHR documentation of palliative care consultation during an inpatient stay for patients who reported preference for "comfort care" (quality of life over extending life) and wanted a discussion.
Time Frame
6-month period following the target visit
Title
Palliative Care Referral, Outpatient Visit - All Patients
Description
EHR documentation of referral to palliative care services, or discussion about a referral, during an outpatient visit.
Time Frame
3-month period following the target visit
Title
Palliative Care Referral, Outpatient Visit - Patients Most Likely to Benefit
Description
EHR documentation of referral to palliative care services, or discussion about a referral, during an outpatient visit for patients who reported preference for "comfort care" (quality of life over extending life) and wanted a discussion.
Time Frame
3-month period following the target visit
Title
Palliative Care Referral, Outpatient Visit - All Patients
Description
EHR documentation of referral to palliative care services, or discussion about a referral, during an outpatient visit.
Time Frame
6-month period following the target visit
Title
Palliative Care Referral, Outpatient Visit - Patients Most Likely to Benefit
Description
EHR documentation of referral to palliative care services, or discussion about a referral, during an outpatient visit for patients who reported preference for "comfort care" (quality of life over extending life) and wanted a discussion.
Time Frame
6-month period following the target visit
Title
Palliative Care Consultation and/or Referral - All Patients
Description
EHR documentation of palliative care referral during an outpatient visit and/or palliative care consultation during an inpatient stay.
Time Frame
3-month period following the target visit
Title
Palliative Care Consultation and/or Referral - Patients Most Likely to Benefit
Description
EHR documentation of palliative care referral during an outpatient visit and/or palliative care consultation during an inpatient stay for patients who reported preference for "comfort care" (quality of life over extending life) and wanted a discussion.
Time Frame
3-month period following the target visit
Title
Palliative Care Consultation and/or Referral - All Patients
Description
EHR documentation of palliative care referral during an outpatient visit and/or palliative care consultation during an inpatient stay.
Time Frame
6-month period following the target visit
Title
Palliative Care Consultation and/or Referral - Patients Most Likely to Benefit
Description
EHR documentation of palliative care referral during an outpatient visit and/or palliative care consultation during an inpatient stay for patients who reported preference for "comfort care" (quality of life over extending life) and wanted a discussion.
Time Frame
6-month period following the target visit
Other Pre-specified Outcome Measures:
Title
Group Differences - Treatment Preference (Adjustment Variable for Outcome Measuring Goal-concordant Care)
Description
Binary variable indicating whether patient's current preference was for life-extension or comfort care
Time Frame
3 months after target visit
Title
Group Differences - Stable Treatment Preference (Filter for Subgroup Analysis of Goal-concordant Care)
Description
Binary variable indicating whether patient's treatment preference was stable between target visit (or baseline, if no 2-week questionnaire was returned) and 3 months.
Time Frame
3 months after target visit

10. Eligibility

Sex
All
Minimum Age & Unit of Time
18 Years
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: Eligible primary clinicians will include all clinicians who provide ongoing primary or specialty care to eligible patient populations. This will include primary care physicians (family medicine and internal medicine), oncologists, pulmonologists, cardiologists, gastroenterologists, nephrologists, neurologists, hepatologists, and geriatricians. Primary clinicians may also include nurse practitioners and physician assistants playing a "primary role" with eligible patients. A "primary role" denotes any clinician for whom having a discussion about end-of-life care with eligible patients would be indicated Eligible interprofessional team members will include nurses, social workers and other clinicians who are part of an enrolled primary clinician's clinic team. Eligible patients will be those under the care of a participating clinician who are 18 years of age or older, have had 2 or more visits with the primary clinician in the last 18 months, and meet diagnostic criteria. Diagnostic criteria include: 1) metastatic cancer or inoperable lung cancer; 2) chronic obstructive pulmonary disease with FEV1 values <35% predicted or oxygen dependence or restrictive lung disease with a TLC < 50% predicted; 3) New York Heart Association Class III or IV heart failure; 4) Child's Class C cirrhosis or MELD score of >17; 5) dialysis-dependent renal failure and either diabetes or a serum albumin of < 2.5; or, 6) older than 75 years with at least one life-limiting chronic illness or older than 90 years. Additional criteria include: PAH w. 6MWD <250m, restrictive lung disease (IPF, ILD) w/ TLC <50%, and cystic fibrosis with FEV1 < 30%. Eligible patients will also be English-speaking and have no significant dementia or cognitive impairment that would limit his/her ability to complete questionnaires. Eligible family members will be identified by the patient, with the criterion that the patient would want the family member involved in medical decision-making for the patient if he/she was not able. For the purpose of this study, "family member" is not confined to legal next-of-kin or immediate family member. Any family member, friend, or caregiver is eligible who is English-speaking and has no dementia or delirium limiting his/her ability to complete questionnaires. Exclusion Criteria: Reasons for exclusion for all subject groups include: legal or risk management concerns; and physical or mental limitations preventing ability to complete research activities.
Overall Study Officials:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
J. Randall Curtis, MD, MPH
Organizational Affiliation
University of Washington
Official's Role
Principal Investigator
Facility Information:
Facility Name
Valley Medical Center
City
Renton
State/Province
Washington
ZIP/Postal Code
98058
Country
United States
Facility Name
Harborview Medical Center
City
Seattle
State/Province
Washington
ZIP/Postal Code
98104
Country
United States
Facility Name
Swedish Medical Center
City
Seattle
State/Province
Washington
ZIP/Postal Code
98122
Country
United States
Facility Name
Northwest Hospital and Medical Center
City
Seattle
State/Province
Washington
ZIP/Postal Code
98133
Country
United States
Facility Name
University of Washington Medical Center
City
Seattle
State/Province
Washington
ZIP/Postal Code
98195
Country
United States
Facility Name
UW Neighborhood Clinics
City
Seattle
State/Province
Washington
ZIP/Postal Code
98195
Country
United States

12. IPD Sharing Statement

Plan to Share IPD
No
Citations:
PubMed Identifier
21940765
Citation
Au DH, Udris EM, Engelberg RA, Diehr PH, Bryson CL, Reinke LF, Curtis JR. A randomized trial to improve communication about end-of-life care among patients with COPD. Chest. 2012 Mar;141(3):726-735. doi: 10.1378/chest.11-0362. Epub 2011 Sep 22.
Results Reference
background
PubMed Identifier
15947336
Citation
Knauft E, Nielsen EL, Engelberg RA, Patrick DL, Curtis JR. Barriers and facilitators to end-of-life care communication for patients with COPD. Chest. 2005 Jun;127(6):2188-96. doi: 10.1378/chest.127.6.2188.
Results Reference
background
PubMed Identifier
9436892
Citation
Curtis JR, Patrick DL. Barriers to communication about end-of-life care in AIDS patients. J Gen Intern Med. 1997 Dec;12(12):736-41. doi: 10.1046/j.1525-1497.1997.07158.x.
Results Reference
background
PubMed Identifier
15332385
Citation
Curtis JR, Engelberg RA, Nielsen EL, Au DH, Patrick DL. Patient-physician communication about end-of-life care for patients with severe COPD. Eur Respir J. 2004 Aug;24(2):200-5. doi: 10.1183/09031936.04.00010104.
Results Reference
background
PubMed Identifier
17040146
Citation
Engelberg R, Downey L, Curtis JR. Psychometric characteristics of a quality of communication questionnaire assessing communication about end-of-life care. J Palliat Med. 2006 Oct;9(5):1086-98. doi: 10.1089/jpm.2006.9.1086.
Results Reference
background
PubMed Identifier
12114382
Citation
Curtis JR, Wenrich MD, Carline JD, Shannon SE, Ambrozy DM, Ramsey PG. Patients' perspectives on physician skill in end-of-life care: differences between patients with COPD, cancer, and AIDS. Chest. 2002 Jul;122(1):356-62. doi: 10.1378/chest.122.1.356.
Results Reference
background
PubMed Identifier
30025937
Citation
Coats H, Downey L, Sharma RK, Curtis JR, Engelberg RA. Quality of Communication and Trust in Patients With Serious Illness: An Exploratory Study of the Relationships of Race/Ethnicity, Socioeconomic Status, and Religiosity. J Pain Symptom Manage. 2018 Oct;56(4):530-540.e6. doi: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2018.07.005. Epub 2018 Jul 17.
Results Reference
derived
PubMed Identifier
29802770
Citation
Curtis JR, Downey L, Back AL, Nielsen EL, Paul S, Lahdya AZ, Treece PD, Armstrong P, Peck R, Engelberg RA. Effect of a Patient and Clinician Communication-Priming Intervention on Patient-Reported Goals-of-Care Discussions Between Patients With Serious Illness and Clinicians: A Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA Intern Med. 2018 Jul 1;178(7):930-940. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2018.2317.
Results Reference
derived
PubMed Identifier
27265813
Citation
Fakhri S, Engelberg RA, Downey L, Nielsen EL, Paul S, Lahdya AZ, Treece PD, Curtis JR. Factors Affecting Patients' Preferences for and Actual Discussions About End-of-Life Care. J Pain Symptom Manage. 2016 Sep;52(3):386-94. doi: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2016.03.012. Epub 2016 Jun 3.
Results Reference
derived
Links:
URL
https://www.pcori.org/research-results/2013/health-system-intervention-improve-communication-about-end-life-care
Description
Click here for more information about this study. PCORI Project Summary: Health System Intervention to Improve Communication about End-of-Life Care for Vulnerable Patients
URL
http://depts.washington.edu/eolcare/
Description
The End-of-Life Care Research Program at the UW School of Medicine
URL
http://www.uwpalliativecarecenter.com/
Description
The Palliative Care Center of Excellence at the University of Washington

Learn more about this trial

Improving Communication About Serious Illness

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